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Tycho Brahes discovered a new star in Cassiopeia.
Cassiopeia is a constellation not a single star.
Cassiopeia is a constellation in the northern hemisphere named after the queen in Greek mythology. It contains a variety of stars, including several types like main sequence stars, giants, and supergiants. One of the most notable stars in Cassiopeia is the supernova remnant known as Cassiopeia A.
Cassiopeia is a constellation and not a single star so to give a temperature would be inaccurate.
Cassiopeia and the Big Dipper appear to rotate counterclockwise around the North Star in the northern hemisphere.
Tycho Brahe discovered a bright new star, known as a supernova, near the Cassiopeia constellation in 1572. He observed that this star appeared suddenly and eventually faded away, which challenged the belief at the time that stars were fixed and unchanging.
Cassiopeia is a constellation, not a single star, so it does not have a specific absolute magnitude. The stars within the constellation Cassiopeia have a range of absolute magnitudes depending on their distance and luminosity.
The star between Big Dipper and Cassiopeia is Polaris, commonly known as the North Star. It is located almost directly above the North Pole and serves as a useful navigational reference point due to its fixed position in the night sky.
Ruchbah, also known as Delta Cassiopeiae, is a blue-white star located in the constellation Cassiopeia.
The magnitude of the Schedar star in Cassiopeia is -1.985. Remember Negative stars are brighter.
cassiopeia
cassiopeia